SIRPα polymorphisms, but not the prion protein, control phagocytosis of apoptotic cells


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Date

2013-11-18

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

Prnp−/− mice lack the prion protein PrPC and are resistant to prion infections, but variable phenotypes have been reported in Prnp−/− mice and the physiological function of PrPC remains poorly understood. Here we examined a cell-autonomous phenotype, inhibition of macrophage phagocytosis of apoptotic cells, previously reported in Prnp−/− mice. Using formal genetic, genomic, and immunological analyses, we found that the regulation of phagocytosis previously ascribed to PrPC is instead controlled by a linked locus encoding the signal regulatory protein α (Sirpa). These findings indicate that control of phagocytosis was previously misattributed to the prion protein and illustrate the requirement for stringent approaches to eliminate confounding effects of flanking genes in studies modeling human disease in gene-targeted mice. The plethora of seemingly unrelated functions attributed to PrPC suggests that additional phenotypes reported in Prnp−/− mice may actually relate to Sirpa or other genetic confounders.

Publication status

published

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Volume

210 (12)

Pages / Article No.

2539 - 2552

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

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Edition / version

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02207 - Functional Genomics Center Zurich / Functional Genomics Center Zurich check_circle

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